Abstract

Hyposmotic swelling increased 86Rb release in cultured cerebellar granule neurons (1 day in vitro [DIV]) with a magnitude related to the change in osmolarity. 86Rb release was partially blocked by quinidine, Ba2+, and Cs+ but not by TEA, 4-AP, or Gd3+. 86Rb efflux decreased in Cl(-)-depleted cells or cells treated with DDF or DIDS, suggesting an interconnection between Cl- and K+ fluxes. Swelling induced a substantial increase in [Ca2+]i to which both external and internal sources contribute. However, 86Rb efflux was independent of [Ca2+]0, unaffected by depleting the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) by ionomycin or thapsigargin and insensitive to charybdotoxin, iberiotoxin, and apamin. Swelling-activated 86Rb efflux in differentiated granule neurons after 8 DIV, which express Ca2+-sensitive K+ channels, was not different from that in 1 DIV neurons, nor in time course, net release, Ca2+-dependence, or pharmacological sensitivity. We conclude that the swelling-activated K+ efflux in cerebellar granule neurons is not mediated by Ca2+-sensitive large conductance K+ channels (BK) as in many cell types but resembles that in lymphocytes where it is possibly carried by voltage-gated K+ channels.

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